Sunday, November 25, 2012

Damaged Dignity

Last night, after a particularly arduous shift at work, I went around to Boyfriend's house for hugs and awesome social times with friends. As I excitedly skipped up his driveway, I saw him standing on the deck outside his house conversing with people.

“Hello!” I said excitedly as I claimed my long-awaited hug.
“Hey, gorgeous,” replied Boyfriend. (Boyfriend is nice like that.)

My already considerable ego swelled dangerously. Compliments, while pleasant, tend to instill in me an over-abundance of pride that destroys the sweetness of my soul.

Luckily, on this occasion I was saved from corruption by immediately, and quite accidentally, walking into a glass door.

My dignity was bruised, as were my knees.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Pant-ception

My issues with clothing having gained me some sort of dubious notoriety, I thought I'd write about my latest wardrobe disaster.

As some people are probably aware, I am currently performing in a feminist version of Hamlet entitled Ophelia Thinks Harder.  I suppose I can say I have three roles in the play. My primary role is as Rosencrantz, a surprisingly liberal man with several fantastically awesome lines. The second role is as the Ghost of Ophelia's Mother. I wander in for just one scene, mumble a lot of ghosty nonsense, and drift off again. It's a very minor role, as evidenced by the fact that the character doesn't actually get a name other than "The Ghost of Ophelia's Mother" (hereafter abbreviated as GOOM).  My third role (can it even be called that?) is as Occasional Set Changer. No lines at all with this role - I just shift objects around the stage in what I hope is a stylishly efficient manner.

All three of my roles have their own costume requirements. My first foray onto the stage is as a set-changer. As shoving furniture and throwing pillows around is not really the domain of an incorporeal ghost, I wear my Rosencrantz costume. Immediately after that I have my scene as GOOM, after which I change back into Rosencrantz. The distressingly short amount of time between scene-changing and GOOM has resulted in a rather cunning costume cheat: I wear a ludicrous number of pants.

First off, I wear two pairs of underpants. One pair is white. The other is nude. The white underpants are worn on top of the nude underpants, for reasons too complicated and irrelevant to explain.

My GOOM costume consists of a beautiful white dress and cape worn with pale, ghostly pantihose. I put the pantihose on over my underpants at the beginning of the night in anticipation of a quick costume change later on. Over the pantihose I wear my Rosenpants and a pair of black, manly socks.

Underpants within underpants within pantihose within pants with a side-order of socks. It is practically Pantception. Pants-pants-pants-pants.

Usually, it works pretty well. Until one performance a few nights ago... when disaster occured.

I'd just finished my final set-change and I was hurriedly changing into GOOM.  One of my fingers was stinging slightly but, absorbed as I was with costume changing, I ignored it. I ripped off my shirt and tie and flung them haphazardly across a chair. Without pausing I ruthlessly tore off my Rosenpants and replaced them with my GOOM dress.

Just as I was reaching for my cape I glanced down at my dress. Horror rushed through me like a howling wind. Bright red splotches of blood were smeared all over my pristine white dress. I stared wildly at my stinging finger. Evidently, I'd cut it while set-changing. Blood was gushing out of it in torrents, despite it seeming to be only a small cut.

And I had approximately four minutes before I had to go onstage.

I began to panic. I admit it... some expletive may have escaped my tongue. My fellow castmates, alerted to my dilemma, swung into action. One person seized a cloth and desperately tried sponging out the blood on my dress. Another person seized my hand, raised it skywards, and hissed at me to keep it elevated to slow the bleeding. And someone else daringly made a forbidden raid past the audience into the theatre kitchen to grab the first aid kit.

Meanwhile, I'd spotted that my white Rosencrantz shirt, my blue-and-white tie, and my cream-coloured trousers were also speckled with blood. It was a costume disaster of unimaginable proportions.

But it seems that miracles can happen. The blood was able to be sponged off. My finger was liberally smothered in bandaids. I put on my cape. And I made it onstage in time. I still had to keep my finger elevated to stop the bleeding, but hey - I was playing a ghost, and freaky, abnormal hand gestures could definitely be worked into my performance. I wafted onstage, cape billowing, a vision in white, hands raised in holy benediction.

And I looked down and realised I'd forgotten to take off my thick, black, manly socks.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

The Lesbian Sex-Room Saga - Part 2

After the rather unfortunate father-causing-me-to-run-out-into-the-street-and-scream incident, the Flatmate and I spent an enjoyable evening scouring Google for suitable images - luckily without the aid of my stepmum. I rather suspect that Google censors search results, but even so, we managed to find a few gems. (Wikipedia was surprisingly helpful as well. Too helpful. My mind is forever sullied.)

The next day I went to the uni library to print off the photos. As soon as I entered the library I scouted around for the most inconspicuous computer possible. I wanted to be far, far away from prying eyes. There's just something not right about printing naughty pictures in a library. To my discomfort the only computer available was one in full view right in the centre of the room. Never mind, I thought. If anyone asked, I was an art student doing a project that just happened to feature copulating females.

I decided to do a trial run and print only one photo off to start with. This turned out to be a smart move because the printing system had been recently changed and for the life of me I couldn't figure out how to use it. After struggling unsuccessfully for several minutes with the fandangled new swipe card system, I gave in and asked the librarian for help.

(Because for some reason it's easier to ask a librarian to help you print porn than it is to ask a shop assistant to help you out of a dress you inadvertantly got stuck in.)

A few seconds effort was all it took for the librarian to get the printer working. Her eyes bulged slightly as an A3 photo of a woman clad only in conveniently-tied black rope slid out of the printer, but she graciously refrained from commenting. I did my best to appear nonchalant and not blush.

I successfully printed off the other photos - about fifteen in all - and brought them home and left them on the Flatmate's bed for her to arrange while I went to work.

The next portion of the story is only hearsay; but tell it I must, and I apologise in advance for any inaccuracies that may ensue.

It was not easy for the Flatmate to complete her task. For one, staring at naked women is most definitely not one of her favourite occupations. For another, my parents were at home; which would not normally be a problem as ordinarily she could just shut the door and not be disturbed.

But there was a factor she had not considered: rugby.

Now, my stepmum is an insane rugby fanatic. She is one of those trying people who insist on vocalising every exciting moment of a game. Shrieks, gasps, and cries of "GO! GO!" split the eardrums of any people unfortunate enough to be in her presence. She has caused my father - a former rugby referee - to claim that he does not enjoy watching rugby, simply so he has an excuse not to be in the same room as her during a match.

It so happened that there was a rugby game on that evening. And my stepmum, typically, was watching it alone.

But either she could not contain the ardent glee that rugby brings her, or perhaps she thought she would try and initiate a foreigner into the Kiwi cultural rugby bliss, because in addition to screaming at the top of her lungs she would also run down the hallway to the Flatmate's bedroom and inform her of every event that occured in the game.

This was frustrating for the Flatmate, not merely because she didn't give two hoots about the rugby, but because she had all the lesbian images spread out on her bed as she figured out the best visual arrangement. As soon as she heard my stepmum begin to stir - heralded by a long, piercing shriek - she had to rush furiously to turn every photo over before my stepmum made it to the room. As it is approximately a three-second dash from lounge to bedroom, she had very little time assume an air of decency. The fact that I'd accidentally printed some of the pictures double-sided did not help.

It was a tense evening; but she endured, and at last the pictures were displayed on the wall in their full, graphic glory.

A few hours later her sister arrived from the airport. It really irks me that I couldn't be there to see her reaction; but I was told her eyes widened and she muttered the Hindi version of, "Oh my." The Flatmate congratulated herself; her sister was very, very shocked and even slightly horrified. Did she feel guilty about ruining the innocence of her beloved sister? No! She felt triumphant! Our scheme had succeeded, despite the many odds and obstacles!

Alas, she had underestimated my father's innate desire to be overly-helpful.

After unloading all of the Flatmate's Sister's luggage from the car, he then tried to carry it into the bedroom - now unashamedly a lesbian sex room. The Flatmate resorted to desperate measures as she attempted to waylay him at the door. She somehow convinced my dad to simply bring the suitcases into the house while she shifted them into the bedroom.

This task done, the Flatmate made the foolish, insane mistake of letting my father out of her sight for the shortest of moments. Dad, no longer needed in his role of suitcase-carrier, immediately tried to find something else useful to do. It was a bitterly cold night, he thought. The Flatmate and the New Flatmate were from a tropical country; doubtless they were suffering from winter's chill. He very kindly decided to try to create the conditions described in the old saying, a warm welcome.

I can visualise it so clearly. I can imagine my father walking into the bedroom, joy and goodwill beaming from his soul. He goes over to the heater and switches it on. Her turns to leave – and sees a sight a godly man ought never to see.

His heart would have frozen over. His eyes would have quickly shot away from the ghastly sight of naked women pleasuring each other. His brow would furrow and the corners of his mouth turn down into the bushy depths of his beard. He would have stood still a moment as he meditated on the depravity of modern society.

And then he would have left as fast as he possibly could.

He ran into the Flatmate in the hallway just outside the sex room. They stared awkwardly at each other.
My father cleared his throat. “Um... I just turned the heater in your room on.”
The Flatmate desperately thought of something to say. “Thank you,” she said at last. “That's very kind of you.”

And they turned and walked away from each other, as though they had wordlessly made a pact never to speak of it again.




The Saga continues in Part Three! If the Hobbit can do it, then dammit, so can I.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

The Lesbian Sex-Room Saga - Part 1

It is traditional amongst my circle of acquaintances to attempt to embarass the hell out of any friend who arrives at the airport from overseas. This normally involves dressing up in elaborate and attention-grabbing outfits, the theory being that the person arriving in the country will be ashamed of their welcoming party being so flamboyantly attired. In the past we have:

- Disguised ourselves as bumblebees
- Turned up wearing pyjamas and clutching teddy bears
- Worn saris (this is not advisable in the middle of winter)
- And on one occasion, I dressed up as an exaggerated version of myself. This involved bracelets crowded all the way up my forearms, an unnecessarily long skirt, teabags trailing from my belt and a tin of muffins clutched to my bejewelled and glittering chest.

The Flatmate's sister would be arriving from India soon to live and study with us. The last time she visited was the occasion of the bumblebee disguise, and to our disgust she did not find it at all embarassing and actually thought it rather cute. This time, the Flatmate and I decided, we would go an extra step. We would not just dress crazy; we would act crazy.

We would stage a loud, raucous, uninhibited lesbian fight. In the middle of the airport. In front of everyone.

The fight was planned with gleeful enthusiasm. It would go something like this:


Flatmate: Welcome, sister! Ah, I see you have a lot of luggage; fear not, for Zabinsky has a sizeable car, and a cavernous wardrobe resides within our bedroom.

Me: Of which bedroom do you speak?

Flatmate: Eh, our bedroom.

Me: You intend for your sister to share our bedroom? I cannot say I approve. In the secret hours of the night, when the moon hides her face in the sky's dappled darkness and we, you know, get it on, would not the proximity of your sister create some discomfort?

Flatmate: You need not trouble yourself with these worries. My sister shall share my room and you shall have your own.

Me: Alas! Is this then how you would destroy our love, by ripping us asunder and placing a cold, lifeless wall betwixt us? Ah! Such betrayal tears my heart in twain! Thou monster!

Flatmate: Call you me so? Hypocrite! Be aware that I know of your affection for that saucy wench Mary-Anne. I have seen the way she doth look at you, and of your looks in return.

Me: Your eyes have deceived you! Be assured there is nothing between us; only you occupy my heart!

Flatmate: Fie! Utter not such lies! I rejoice in the knowledge that you no longer share my bed; indeed I wish you were gone from my very house, for residing with you is anathema to me!

Me: Then I shall leave, if my presence inflicts such pain upon you! JUST GIVE ME BACK MY YELLOW PENGUIN!

Flatmate: Never! For I love the yellow penguin!

Me: Like how you once loved me?

Flatmate: Love? Ha! I laugh derisively at such drivel. How could I ever love you - a lying, betraying, disgusting, horrible, heartless bastard with as much of a concept of cleanliness as a crustacean!

Me: You fiend!

Flatmate: Bitch!

- And so on, with the fight descending into a screaming match and name calling and possible hair-pulling. This would continue until such time as we subsided into frosty silence, were told off by security, or succumbed to the compelling urge to giggle.

It would have been epic. It would have blown every other embarassing airport reception out of the water. In time to come, when the years had forever marred our flesh with the contours of age, we would have looked back at that night and marvelled, "Good Lord, how wild we were!"

It is a cruel universe sometimes. It transpired I was working that evening and couldn't get time off to go to the airport. The lesbian fight could not occur.

This called for the creation of a back-up plan.

We theorised that if I could not be at the airport to cause embarassment there, then a similar state of embarassment must be created at home. We decided to stick with the lesbian theme and turn the bedroom Flatmate and her sister would be sharing into a sex room.

A lesbian sex room.

We brainstormed all the many ways we could convey this idea: Neon lighting; lavishly draping velvet across the beds; hanging assorted chains and leather paraphenalia from the ceiling; strewing seductive underwear across the floor with reckless abandon; placing posters of scantily-clad women in compromising positions upon the walls.

Time and budget not being things we had great quantities of, we regretfully scaled back our creativity and decided to simply print out lewd photos and stick them on the wall.

Before we could get started, however, my father knocked on the door and asked if we'd like a cup of tea.
"Sure," we agreed, as we never pass up a chance to drink that most beloved of beverages.
The three of us, Father, Flatmate, and I, sat around the kitchen table sipping tea and chatting amiably.
"Have you ever seen Bend It Like Beckham?" my dad asked after a few minutes.
"Ah, yeah we -" I started to reply.
"Great movie!" my dad enthused. "I was thinking of watching it tonight on the upstairs TV. Big screen. Surround sound. Keen?" His face contorted with glee.
Flatmate and I looked significantly at each other.
"Um. We... had... plans..." Flatmate replied.
"Oh, cool! Doing what?" Dad asked.
"Um..."
"Just... stuff," I filled in, then decided "stuff" wasn't a decent enough answer. "We'd ask you for your help, but I don't think you'd be able to help that much."
This was a terrible, terrible thing to say.
"Really? Help doing what?" asked Dad, eagerness to be of assistance shining from his eyes.
I opened my mouth to reply. I was about to ask, "Well, how would you decorate a lesbian sex room?" - but I couldn't. The words froze on my tongue. There are some questions you should never ask a parent, particularly a conservative Christian parent like my father, and How would you decorate a lesbian sex room is one of them.
"Oh," I mumbled, desperately trying to come up with something sensible to say and fighting the panic that rose when I couldn't. "We - we were - just planning on decorating the bedroom for - for her sister's arrival."
"Fantastic!" cried my father. "That sounds like something Lorene would enjoy!" And before I could prevent him he turned and hollered upstairs to my stepmum, "HEY! LORENE!"
My panic turned to insanity. I shrieked, "I CAN'T COPE WITH THIS!", set down my tea, ran outside to the road and howled wordlessly at passing cars.*

According to my flatmate, my father stared after me in astonishment and asked, "Did I say something wrong?"
Flatmate, her voice fraught with forced calm, politely snickered and said, "That Zabinsky... she's a funny one, isn't she?" before attempting to drown herself in her cup of tea.


***


PART 2 coming shortly! I thought this story was getting a tad long, so I chose to split it into two. Like a couple of movie adaptations I could name.


*I'm not kidding. I actually did this.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Performing a Death Scene with Sir Ian McKellen


In the minutes leading up to the start of Sir Ian McKellen’s one-man show I was not filled with eager anticipation. No, I was running madly up Queen Street desperately trying to not be late. A last-minute, failed attempt at procuring coffee almost cost me the first, precious moments of his performance – much to the disgust of my Good friend, Phil, who’d been sending me desperate text messages for the last ten minutes telling me to hurry up and get to the theatre NOW.

I made it – just. Panting, gasping for breath, we hastened to our seats and sat just as the lights began to dim.

Out of the darkness music began to play. The tune was instantly recognizable – the Fellowship were about to cross the Bridge of Khazad Dum.

A light sprang from the shadows, illuminating the stage. A lectern and a director’s chair with a sword lying across it were the only things upon it; but as the music faded a man walked on. He wore a simple blue shirt, grey jeans, and rather snazzy heeled shoes. In a voice where every word was filled with meaning and power he recited one of the most stirring passages from the greatest work of fiction ever written: Gandalf’s battle with the Balrog.

I listened, agog, to Sir Ian shout “You shall not pass!” and “Fly, you fools!” in a voice weighty with expression. He raised his arms and brought them down to break the bridge asunder; and when the Balrog, falling into darkness, coiled its whip around his ankle, he fell to his knees – fell into the abyss – and was gone.

It was unutterably cool.

The rest of the first part of the performance was epically casual. Sir Ian showed off his sword, Glamdring, and allowed a few members of the audience to hold it and pretend to stab him with it. According to him, the show had only been put together very recently. He borrowed a program to find out what exactly he was expected to do.

He called on the audience to ask him questions: Which did he prefer, film or theatre? (Theatre, though he tries not to admit it.) Who would win in a fight – Gandalf or Magneto? (He made the audience vote: every single person voted Gandalf. “Well, there’s your answer, then,” he said.) What was his favourite part of New Zealand? (The Milford Sound. He’d been there four times.) Who was his favourite actor to work with? (Judi Dench. When on stage with her, he felt almost bad about breaking the connection she had with the audience by talking.) Were there any parts he really wanted to play? (Well, he didn’t really have a list, but he still thought he could get away by playing Mercutio. No reason why a man of his age couldn’t be hanging around with the lads. Hm…)

He asked a few random trivia questions of his own. “J.R.R. Tolkien – what does the ‘J’ stand for?” he asked the audience.
            “Jeremy,” someone called.
            “No, it wasn’t Jeremy,” said Sir Ian.
            A perplexed mumbling rumbled through the theatre.
            “John!” I cried out eventually.
            “Good!” Sir Ian said. “What does the first ‘R’ stand for?”
            Phil and I could not resist the opportunity to show off.
            “Ronald!” we shouted simultaneously.
            “Yes! And the second ‘R’?”
            “Raoul!” we cried, flushed with pride.
            “It’s pronounced ‘Roool,’ actually,” Sir Ian informed us.
            “ Roool? Weird,” I muttered.
           
He told stories about working of the Lord of the Rings. He explained why there was never any red blood shown in the movies – it’s to fool the censers. Apparently if there wasn’t any blood they wouldn’t notice the violence and therefore give it a rating suitable for kids to watch.

He talked about how the very first scene he ever filmed was in the Shire at the beginning of the Fellowship of the Ring; he thought how it was great how Gandalf’s first scene was the very first he filmed. And then he talked about the very next scene he had to film – the Grey Havens, and he was now Gandalf the White, and he was saying farewell to his little Hobbit friends. He’d never met the actors before. He hadn’t read the book yet and only skimmed the script. He had no idea of the significance of what was happening.

“What am I feeling?” he asked Peter Jackson.
“Well, you’re pretty choked up,” he replied.
“Is a tear in the eye in order?” he asked.
“That’s probably taking it a bit far,” Peter admitted.

And so, as Sir Ian explained to us, if you watch that scene, his face is completely blank – because he hadn’t a clue what was going on. It’s one of the reasons why he prefers theatre acting to film acting.

He said he was trying to convince Peter Jackson to put a scene in the upcoming Hobbit movie of Gandalf taking a leak. (No luck, as yet…)

He told other stories, too, of the one time he’s ever suffered severe stage fright and how Judi Dench got him through it, and the story of his knighthood, and many others.

Then he read some Wordsworth, who is his favourite poet – and then suddenly it was the intermission.

Sir Ian spent the intermission casually wandering around the foyer chatting with people. Phil and I stared in awe.

The second half of the performance consisted entirely of Shakespeare. If you have ever watched the DVD “Acting Shakespeare”, which is a film of a previous one-man show Sir Ian has done, you will have some idea of what it was like. If you haven’t, you should. It’s amazing.

Sir Ian pulled out a list of all thirty-seven plays Shakespeare wrote and challenged the audience to name them all, crossing them off whenever they were called out. When some of the plays were called he acted out passages from them – Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, Cymbeline, Richard III, Titus Andronicus, and others. I suspect he suffered from selective hearing, however, because Hamlet was inexplicably left until last – probably because his rendition of Hamlet was incredible and deserved to be saved till last.

After that, he answered a few more questions, sang a little song, and acted a scene written by Thomas Moore for a finale.

Of course, the audience demanded he come and perform an encore.

Sir Ian invited anyone who wished to act a scene with him to come down to the stage and join him. Phil and I were there in a trice, along with about two-dozen others. He shook our hands as we came up on stage. It was beyond thrilling.

As we huddled together on the stage he whispered what he wished us to do. We were, he said, to be dead French soldiers. When he snapped his fingers, we were to fall down dead. When he spoke a particular name, we were to stand up again, join hands, and take a bow. Easy.

We spread out across the stage. Sir Ian began to talk about how in Shakespeare it is always best to play Kings, partly because you get to wear the fanciest frocks, but mainly because quite often you were given messages to read out to the audience. Because the message was already pre-written, you don’t have to bother memorizing the script.

Which works perfectly, provided the props manager doesn’t stuff up and send out a blank piece of paper instead.

Sir Ian began to act out a scene from Henry V, where the King is given a list of the French dead.
            “This note doth tell me of ten thousand French that in the field lie slain.” Sir Ian snapped his fingers and two-dozen soldiers instantly fell down dead. “These, their names.” Sir Ian studied the note. He turned the blank page over. He glanced off-stage as if to ask, what is this? before steeling himself for ultimate embarrassment.
            He proceeded to read out a list of names that are almost, but not quite, vaguely unlike French.
            If at this point the two-dozen deceased French soldiers were caught twitching from suppressed laughter they should not be blamed.
            Sir Ian ‘read’ the final botched name. We arose, joined hands, and bowed – and everything was over.

Well, not quite. Sir Ian was standing outside the theatre with a collecting bucket. The purpose behind this performance was to raise funds to rebuild the theatre in Christchurch. If we donated money, we got to have a photo taken with him and have him sign things.

I was beside myself with glee. I had a ridiculous grin beaming across my face. Up close, Sir Ian was a lot less charismatic and engaging. Possibly it was because he wasn’t on stage, possibly because we were at the end of the line and was fed up with the whole thing.
            “I really enjoyed the show!” I squeaked in awe.
            “Oh, good,” replied Sir Ian unconcernedly as he signed my orange notebook.
            Phil handed his phone to an attendant whose job it was to take photos of people with Sir Ian. After giving her a brief run-down of how to use the camera, he joined Sir Ian and myself for our photo-op.
            “Where are you from?” Sir Ian asked Phil, evidently noting his unusual accent.
            “Um,” said Phil. “I’m from here, but I went to an American school in the Philippines.”
            “That must have been interesting for you,” commented Sir Ian.
            Looking back on it, I suppose it’s understandable Sir Ian would be more interested in Phil than myself. At the time I was so overawed I couldn’t think beyond, Yay! I’m standing next to Sir Ian McKellen!
            There was a brief, panicky moment when it appeared Phil’s phone was unable to take a proper photo.
            “What are you going to do about it?” asked Sir Ian, sounding mildly concerned.
            “Um….” said Phil. I shrugged, my brain still unable to function properly.
            Sir Ian raised a hand and summoned one of his minions, who immediately appeared as if by magic. “Talk to Ben, he’s good with things like this,” said Sir Ian, and he turned his attention to a new group of fans.
            Ben had a look at the photo and we collectively decided it was actually fairly satisfactory. Because Phil and I are shy, uncourageous individuals, we forsook the chance to say goodbye to Sir Ian and decided to just leave.

As we drove home listening to the Lord of the Rings soundtrack, I thought, Wow. Today I performed a death scene on-stage with Sir Ian McKellen.

Life goal accomplished.

Awesome.


UPDATE: Check this out! See if you can spot Yours Truly.  Hint: I'm wearing glasses and a colourful skirt. http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/arts/7002353/McKellen-lights-up-Akld-theatre

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Awkward Conversation #2


The Flatmate and I were simultaneously overwhelmed by the desire to use the restroom at Denny’s. There were two cubicles, both conveniently unoccupied.
“Oh, that’s lucky,” said Flatmate happily.  “It would have been uncomfortable, otherwise.”
“Aw,” I said. “But I was looking forward to sharing…”
We both giggled and proceeded into the cubicles. As we went about our business, Flatmate said, “An amazing thing happened at work today. It involves a child.”
“A child!” I exclaimed. “Did you punch it in the face?” Flatmate’s hatred of children is legendary. The only reason she has not yet embarked upon the mass annihilation of children is because, in her words, “they are potential adults” and can therefore be tolerated.
            “No, I didn’t, believe it or not,” she replied.  “It’s an AWESOME story, but I won’t tell it to you in here because that’d be just a little bit weird.”
            From outside my cubicle came the sound of hands being washed. Evidently, Flatmate was much further ahead in the process than I was.
            I joked, “But look how much we’re bonding in here!”
            “We flat together, Zabinsky, how much more bonding to you need?”
            The dull roar of a hand drier reverberated throughout the room. I spoke louder to compensate.
            “True! We already share the same shower!” I shouted.
            “Hmm,” said Flatmate.
            “Obviously not at the same time, but –“
            “Is that you out there, Zabinsky?” she interrupted.
            I suffered a momentary inability to process the ramifications of her question.
            “No,” I replied. “I thought that was you.”
            We fell silent. The tension in the room was infinite. We listened to the sounds of the hand drier switching off, receding footsteps, and a door opening and closing.
            “Oh my,” I said.
            Typically, we giggled.

Awkward Conversation #1


A couple of weeks ago I walked into the computer lab at uni to find my flatmate, who is also my fellow student, practically bursting at the seams from the sheer strength of scandalous gossip she was trying to retain.
            “Guess what!” she said excitedly.
            “What?” I demanded.
            “I have some awesome gossip I just HAVE to tell you! Not here, though,” she added, glancing around the crowded computer lab. “It’s really not appropriate.  I’ll tell you later.”
            I glanced at the time. Our computer tutorial wouldn’t finish for another two hours and I honestly didn’t think my curiosity could cope with that long a wait.
            “Outside!” I insisted. “Now!”
            I dragged Flatmate out into the corridor and huddled against the wall. In a hushed voice she very quickly filled me in on the shocking antics of one of our classmates. I gasped and looked appropriately horrified. As we discussed in hurried whispers the possible ramifications of the dreadful event, one of our lecturers walked by.

This wasn’t just one of our lecturers – this was the lecturer. Our favourite lecturer. The lecturer we are both deeply infatuated with, the one we fight over, vying for his attention, even going so far as to draw hearts on his window with lipstick. We’ve even given him a nickname: Jaanface - “Jaan” being a Hindi word meaning “darling” or “my dear”, and “face” because it sounds impressive when used as a suffix.

Jaanface walked up behind Flatmate just as she was dissecting the more gory details of the story.
            “Hey,” he said, obviously realizing he was walking in on an intimate conversation but deciding to interrupt anyway, because he’s amazing at ignoring conventions. (It's one of the reasons why we admire him.) “This sounds interesting.”
I flushed a deep magenta, partly because of the nature of our discussion but mostly because of the befuddlement I typically experience when I’m around someone I’m suffering unrequited love for. Flatmate whirled around and turned just as red, probably for the exact same reasons.
            “Obviously you’re talking about my class, right?” he continued, grinning like a gleeful god.
            We're intelligent females. We could have come up with any number of witty retorts. But we didn't. We giggled. Giggled like pathetic little schoolgirls. Jaanface looked faintly alarmed when we were unable to stop.
            “You are interrupting a very important gossip session,” I choked out at last, accidentally sounding somewhat haughty. Flatmate continued to emit high-pitched cackling noises, which obviously freaked Jaanface out even more.
            “That’s really disappointing,” he said valiantly.
            We giggled even harder, and Jaanface made a hasty retreat down the corridor. Flatmate and I ran back into the computer lab and dissolved into howls of laughter. 

When I grow up and become an adult, I’m going to marry Jaanface.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

An April Fool's Romance


On March the 31st I was vigilant in reminding myself to beware the events of the following day.
            “Be wary, Zara!” I cried. “There are those who would tease and trick you; know that every seeming good deed has the potential to be wickedness in disguise! Spurn those who offer you mysterious items, disbelieve those who tell you improbable facts! It is all lies and deceit. Keep your wits about you and no one will be able to succeed in their pranks.”
            “Righty-ho, Zara,” I said amiably.
The next day dawned bright with promise. And for once I was sensible; I remembered my advice from the day before. So when a certain person, with a suspicious aura of friendliness, gave me a letter and a mysterious box, I smirked to myself and thought, Aha! A trick this must certainly be!
            I opened the letter and began to read. My suspicions were confirmed. I will not go into detail as to the contents of the letter, but the general gist of it was that the person who’d given me the letter felt strong feelings of a romantic nature for me, which were described in a creatively poetic fashion. The culmination of the letter said that he had enclosed a small token of his affection for me inside the box.
            To be truly honest, I was secretly quite hurt. You see, this is someone I would probably genuinely like a love letter from, and here he was, giving me one as a joke, either unaware of or mocking my feelings for them.
            But if I have one talent, it is being able to act and pretend that I don’t actually have any feelings for someone at all. It’s an ability I have been obliged to cultivate over the years and I have refined it into an art form. Therefore I was able to turn to my supposed admirer, who stood watching me read the letter with a slight smirk marring his otherwise hopeful look. I gazed into his eyes. I told him all the things I wished I could actually say to him. But I exaggerated my words, turning truth into farce. I graced them with an exquisitely subtle touch of sarcasm. In this way I laughed off his letter and disguised my true feelings.
            “Ah! You move me with your declaration of love!” I cried.  “A blaze of warmth fills the barest reaches of my heart. Do you know how long I have pined for you, longed for you? Thoughts of you occupy my mind with painful constancy; I dream of no one else. To discover you feel the same way for me fills me with indescribable joy. It near overwhelms me! I feel like I must faint from happiness!” I swooned against a table, casting my hand across my forehead in dramatic fashion and fluttering my eyelids. I was confident I looked and sounded ridiculous. Certainly frequent spasms, probably of suppressed laughter, disfigured his face.
            I picked up the box and clutched it to my heart. “I am breathless with anticipation to discover what you have given me!” I said. I was beginning to really enjoy myself and looked forward to waxing lyrical about whatever pathetic object was in the box. I was certain the box would contain something that obviously contradicted the contents of his letter.
            I was right. Horribly, gruesomely right.
            Inside the box was a severed duck head.
            I found myself unable to speak. Thoughts whirled around my head, refusing to take tangible form. My eyes tried to deny what it was I was seeing.
            A duck head. An actual, real duck head, that once belonged to a living, breathing, quacking duck.
            I love ducks. They’re so cute and feathery and they waddle about looking very silly. A couple of months ago I wandered into the kitchen at work and saw a dead, plucked duck defrosting in the sink. It was incredibly heart wrenching. I'd spent most of the afternoon feeling weepy. I’d never cried over a dead animal before. Now, I know I’ve been officially vegetarian for over two years now, but I’d always been quite bad in that I’d often succumb to the temptation to eat meat. But after the defrosting duck incident all desire for meat vanished.
            This person knew I was vegetarian. This person knew how much the dead duck had affected me. By giving me a duck head they went beyond simple pranking. This was just plain malicious.
            I felt intense anger rising in me. I didn’t know how to react to it; I almost never get angry. I didn’t know whether I wanted to cry or shout or hit him in the face. How dare he treat me this way? First he laughs at my feelings for him; now he tramples my ethics and principles. I was so livid. I can’t remember ever feeling so angry. In fact, I became so enraged I resorted to a dramatic solution: I woke up.
I lay in my bed with the sun streaming in through my window. I felt extremely disorientated. Fury was still causing the blood to race through my veins and I was thinking uncharitable thoughts about someone I usually like far more than is seemly. Eventually, though, reason began to return to me.
Somehow, I had dreamed a dream and thought it true. This dream instilled surprisingly strong feelings of anger in me. I’d been fooled.
And then it clicked! My subconscious brain had succeeded in pranking me. Me! I’d pranked myself and hadn’t even realized I was doing it! Far from being angry, I felt instead affection and pride towards myself, coupled with a strong sense of amusement.
“Heheh. Zara – you are too clever!” I exclaimed.
“I know,” I replied modestly.
“Seriously! To pull off a decent prank require conscious forethought and planning – but you just did it! We occupy the same mind space and I didn’t even know you were tricking me! That I tricked me! HAH! I’m so awesome! I bet no one else can do that.”
“Yes. Possibly. Or maybe you’re just way more gullible than everyone else. You’re so silly you fall for your own jokes.”
“Oh, shut up,” I said, still cackling with glee. “Don’t kill my buzz. This is too cool.”
Yes, Zara, I thought. This was cool. Mwa. Ha. Ha. Ha. Ha.




True story.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Dress of Doom

The day began, auspiciously enough, with my alarm failing to go off. The result was that I awoke at precisely the time I should have been arriving at uni for my first class. I decided to take this as a sign that I should not go to that class and instead do one of the many small tasks that I've been putting off for ages.

Which is how I found myself happily meandering down K Road snooping in all its many interesting op-shops, on the prowl for a new work skirt.

I wandered into the Paper Bag Princess. After several minutes of focused skirt stalking I found several items of interest. Having thus completed the business side of the trip I moved on to casual browsing.

Hanging in an innocuous corner of the shop was a black dress that caught my eye. High-waisted; short in the front but long in the back; the bust and long sleeves made of heavy, stiff material that contrasted with a floaty chiffon skirt. Size: Medium. Price: Very cheap. In other words: Awesome. Provided it fit, it would become mine.

Burdened with my selections, I went up to the front counter and asked the shop assistant if I could try things on. The lady was quite engrossed with the work she was doing - attaching labels to new items of clothing. She glanced up briefly, said, "Sure, go for it," and nodded towards the changing rooms directly opposite the counter.
"Thanks!" I cheerfully said, and went into a cubicle.

The changing rooms in this particular store are not ones that encouraged loitering. Located in the very centre of the store, with very short walls and a flimsy curtain providing a bare minimum of privacy, they produce a sense of discomfort that makes one feel as though anyone could peek and stare at you in your undergarments. It was thus with swift and decisive movements I tried on the myriad skirts and settled on one for purchase. Only then did I turn my attention to the glories of The Dress.

I had a bit of difficulty pulling in on. The size of "Medium" was evidently wishful thinking for it could very easily have fitted a small or even an extra-small. Nevertheless I persevered in pulling it over my head. Only when I failed in my attempts to do up the side zip did I finally accept that this dress, while wondrous in many regards, was not to be mine. In any case, the front of the skirt was scandalously short and showed my pale, wrinkly, hairy legs off to full sickening disadvantage; and the sleeves had these ridiculous little pointy bits coming off the shoulders that were strangely reminiscent of the fashion sensibilites of the Addams family. I sighed regretfully and started to take it off.

It was then that things began to get difficult.

No matter how hard I tried to tug and pull I could not get it off. The sleeves were so tight I couldn't bend my arms enough to reach and pull it over my head. The best I could do was wave my arms above me in the haphazard manner of some rapping gangster. As my arms were therefore in full view of the entire shop this was somewhat of an embarassment to me - but I struggled gamely on. I strained until the very seams seemed fit to burst assunder; - but to no avail! The dress would not be removed!

Every now and again I would pause, panting from my efforts, to listen with apprehension to the movements of the shop assistant. I did not know whether I feared or yearned for her to wander over and ask, "How's everything going in there?" For then I would be obliged to tell her of my struggles and I wasn't sure I could bear the shame. As the minutes lengthened so too did the agony of my predicament.

Twenty minutes went by. Then a full half-hour. I had been in that cubicle far longer than was seemly - and unless something changed, I would be in there until Judgement Day or the closing of the store (whichever came first).  At last, in sheer desperation, I concocted a Master Plan.

I ceased my struggles to remove the dress. Instead, I directed my efforts towards the absolute opposite - that of completely doing up the dress. At first it seemed as equally as impossible - the dress had as little desire to do up as it did to be taken off. I was almost sobbing in desperation by this point. This Dress was pure evil - a devil in clothing form!

And at last, only by sucking in my stomach to ridiculous proportions and the careful removal of my bra would The Dress zip up. I spent a few more minutes trying to adjust to oxygen deprivation.

I collected up my assorted paraphenalia, took a deep breath, and whipped open the curtain. I stepped out, pretending bravely that it was perfectly normal to spend forty-five minutes in a changing room evidently doing nothing more than admire myself in the mirror. Affixing an ingratiating smile upon my face I strode up to the counter where the assisstant was still methodically attaching labels to things.
"Hullo," I said brightly. "This might seem like a weird request, but I really love this dress and I really want to wear it out of the shop. Is that possible?"
Dear God, let it be possible, I thought frantically.
"Sure it is!" she replied. "I can see why you'd want to, it's a lovely dress and it looks great on you!"
"Yes," I said, "It is lovely."
"We just need to make sure the security tag is removed... ah, it is up there around your neck... you might need to take it off so I can remove it and then you could change back into it."
My heart froze in sick horror.
"Oh, but that's such a hassle," I said breezily, as though I was just experiencing a fit of laziness and not everlasting, agonising doom. By employing every iota of charisma I possessed I managed to convince her that my doing elaborate gymnastics stretched out on my back across the counter to reach the tag remover was infinitely more convenient.

I paid for the dress. I left.

The wind was blowing harshly and I was in danger of having an already indecently short dress become even more revealing. I walked down the street constantly clutching the skirt, forcing it down. I was sure I looked ridiculous - braless, hairy-legged, gasping on whatever air I could suck into my compressed lungs.

The bus ride home was infinitely worse.

Once home I found that I was still unable to remove the dress myself. The time had come for drastic measures. I drove to my mum's place and entreated her to cut it off me.

She assented; but only after laughing uproariously at my expense for what I felt was an unnecessarily prolonged period of time. "Oh, Zara," she said, wiping tears of glee from her eyes, "This is too ridiculous. You are too ridiculous."
Gee, thanks, Mum.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The Malevolent Mexican

One awesome thing about working in a West Auckland bar is you are always meeting interesting people. Of course, almost all of them are stark raving mad in one way or another – it's almost a required character trait out West – but some of them stand out more than the others.

  • The creepy cricket connoiseur who wears a trilby hat and gumboots and frequently asks me to dance with him on Saturday nights. I am not certain why he feels the need to have a companion to dance with as he finds it completely satisfactory to grind with a pillar. For hours. It is very disturbing.
  • The “Dothraki” - a group of women who enjoy wearing bright purple headscarves and strange glasses, tell silly jokes (usually at my expense), and spend most of their time getting completely sozzled. Their nickname was recently given to them by my manager who is now up to episode six of A Game of Thrones and is completely obsessed.
  • The many, many, many women who come in on a Sunday night and are convinced the bartender looks like Johnny Depp, despite his indignant protests to the contrary. Trust me - this is hilarious to watch and listen to.
  • The lesbian jujitsu practitioner from the dojo next door who once asked me to come over and share a bottle of wine with her after work. It is difficult to turn down a woman who could quite easily rip your spleen out through your ears. It is even more difficult when you have inadvertently given her the impression that you might be bisexual. You see, when she asked me what my “preference” was, instead of replying, “I prefer to maintain a celibate lifestyle and don't like to get involved in sexual relationships”, I may have missed the mark slightly and said instead, “I'm, um, not really into, um, anything in... particular...”. The conversation became quite complicated after that.
  • As a fitting follow-on from the previous story I shall mention the two men who are under the impression that I am some sort of “loose woman”. I was taking a bowl of fries out to a couple of stereotypical Westies – hairy, bourbon-swilling, not yet evolved to a state that appreciates either washing machines or showers. As I placed the fries on their table one of them asked me, “Does your phone number come with that?” In a moment of total brain absentee-ism I replied, “Sorry, that costs extra.” Needless to say I spent the rest of the night assiduously avoiding them.
  • The slightly drunk man who coerced me and another waitress to arm wrestle for tips while his wife moaned in embarassment. (I won.)
  • The people who obviously don't read/watch The Lord of the Rings often enough. One night a group of people wanted to head upstairs to the Mezzanine floor. “Can we go up there?” they asked me. “Or is the way shut?” I peered up the stairs where a red velvet rope provided an obvious clue. “Yes, the way is shut,” I replied and, unwilling to pass up this most excellent opportunity to quote the greatest work of fiction ever created, continued, “It was made by those who are dead, and the dead keep it.” Blank looks ensued. Honestly. It makes me angry how people can be so ignorant.

But possibly the most memorable person – who actually inspired this post – is the Malevolent Mexican.

He came in one morning last week with a document folder and death in his eyes. “I'm here to have a meeting with your manager,” he said brusquely.
“Sure,” I said. “Did you have an appointment at all?”
“Yes,” was his terse reply.
I phoned the office upstairs to see if my manager was available. “Actually, he's gone out, he's not due back for another couple of hours,” the adminisitration lady informed me. “And his phone is playing up so I can't ring him. Plus I don't think he particularly wanted to meet this guy anyway.”
Cunning, I thought. Agree to meet a man you don't particularly want to see, arrange a time, and then make sure you're far away and uncontactable when he shows up. This must be Good Business Accumen, or something.
“Huh,” I said, and hung up. I steeled myself for inevitable confrontation. “Sorry, but my manager's out and he won't be due back for a few hours, I'm sorry.” I say 'sorry' a lot when I'm working.
The man's mouth narrowed. It drew attention to his moustache which I had previously not noticed due to the fact that it was so thin and sinister. It was like pencil line drawn on his face.
“Does he have a cellphone I can ring him on?” he demanded.
“Um... actually... he's been having a lot of trouble with his phone recently so... no, you can't call him. Sorry.”
The look he gave me made my heart quail. Ah! It spoke on how he was certain this was an elaborate plot to make his life even more difficult! All the anger he had experienced, ever, in life, from the time he was a small child and the other boys laughed at the puny size of his willy, to the more recent insult of the departure of his girlfriend who left him to go to Germany with a businessman who had a larger bank balance than him – all flared out from his eyes, swirling and eddying around him in incandescent rage.
It never altered his voice. That was the most terrifying thing – that he was able to suppress and control such intense fury.
“I have driven,” he said, his voice low and steady, “all the way from Northcote solely to have a meeting with your manager.”
“I'm really very sorry,” I said helplessly.
He stood, seething, for several more seconds. I trembled and prayed for salvation.
“I shall write a note for him asking to rearrange the meeting,” he said at last. “Please see that he gets it.”
“Of course,” I hurriedly assured him. “Did you need paper?”
“No.”
“Or a pen?”
“No.”
“Okay!”
While he wrote I took the opportunity to study him. He was wearing a normal blue business shirt, though he had rolled the sleeves up to his elbows and undone the first few buttons. A large expanse of chest hair showed through the opening. Evidently, the rest of the hair that should have formed a part of his moustache had migrated south. Understandable. No living thing would willingly be a part of that face. The shirt was tucked into belted jeans that flared out at the base. And his shoes had little heels on them.
Moustache, shirt, flared jeans, heeled shoes – to me, he looked like some sort of sleazy Mexican such as one sees in movies.
I described him, later, to someone else from work, who immediately guessed he was from the porn industry.
It is a testament to my upbringing that I am more willing to identify someone as being a Mexican rather than a porn industrialist. However – it turns out that I was wrong.
The business card he handed to me along with his note was overlarge and featured several bikini and stiletto-clad women standing next to cars.
After the man left – his heeled shoes going thud, thud, thud like beats of doom against the concrete floor – I found out that he was wanting to host some sort of event at our bar along the lines of having scantily clad women strut about onstage. Fortunately, my manager is not keen. I am glad. I think my soul might just shrivel up and die if I had to lay eyes on that man again.

Word Doodling

Izak convinced me to post a snippit of my story that I've been working on for the past couple of eons. So. Here is the first draft of the intro. Dun dun dun dun.



Lay your hand upon me, stranger, and hear what I would say. I have watched you from afar, heard you call when no one else would listen. I know who it is you are seeking. I had hoped you would find me.

Who are you? What… are you?

Who am I? I am the same as you – an abberation in the system of life. I breathe the cool air, feed upon the products of the earth, and the sun warms and sustains me. I am no more, and no less, significant than any other creature. I have walked beneath the aging trees. I have sung songs and foretold the future. I have laughed, I have danced, screamed, cried, shouted in fury and sighed in joy. I have loved and been loved in return. I think that I have experienced every known feeling. But for all this – I am dead. Much like you. As to what I am – well. Look at me. Can you honestly say you have never seen anything like me? Your eyes are not blind. I am what I appear to be.
But who and what are you, silver-haired stranger? Are you my first pilgrim? Missionary Woman once foretold that I would be a Prophetess, even an Oracle. Somehow I don’t think my current state is how she imagined my life. I’m dead, after all. But Missionary Woman always says that death doesn’t exist the way we think it does. I don’t know what she means by that. I’ve never known what she meant. Sometimes I think she’s so full of odd sayings she ran out of space for common sense.
Still. You came this way seeking answers. I don’t have all the answers, but I know the ones to the questions you seek. You are looking for a man named Kunze. I know where he is and I shall tell you where to find him. But I have a price for my knowledge, pilgrim.

What is it that you want?

Your ears. I require you to listen to me and remember what I tell you. You see, stories are intriguing things. People can create a hundred different versions of the same story, I’ve noticed. And there have been many, many different stories told about me. But none of them have been my own version. I have never told anyone my full story. But I shall tell you, for two reasons: first, because you have a sharper mind than anyone I have ever before encountered and you are not likely to forget my story. And second – because you are my first pilgrim. It’s been years since I died and became what I am. Years. You are the first pilgrim. The first to come to me in all that time. Who knows when the next pilgrim will arrive? I cannot afford to be too picky.
Besides – regardless of whether you remember my story or not, the point is that my version of the story will have been told and shall exist in some sort of formless way. Perhaps you have heard of the Realm of Thought? Philosophers like to argue about the nature of its existence. The story shall live there, forever, for anyone who wishes to hear it.
You are in a hurry to leave. Time is pressing. Your companions are missing, dead, or dying. You cannot afford to stop and listen to the ramblings of a mad thing. I understand. But look up at the branches above you. Do they sway and murmur in the breeze or are they as still and silent as death? You are right, they do not move. But, ah, you think. Perhaps there is no wind here? A logical assumption. Turn your head to the left. A moth rests upon thin air. Its wings do not flutter and yet it does not fall. To the right, the stream ceases its tumbling over rocks; frozen water that is not ice. Even your heart does not beat. Nothing is moving.
Your thought is faster than time. Our minds are joined. You wish to know, and swiftly. I wish to tell, equally as swiftly. Time is subjective to our desires. While we speak an outsider looking in might almost have just enough time to sneeze or scratch his bum. So you see – no harm can come of your lingering to listen.
So, pilgrim. Do you agree to hear my story?

Yes. But you must tell me where Kunze is.

Of course. But the story must come first. Else you shall have no reason to stay and listen to me.

Very well. Tell.